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UK Sales Chart, Week Ending November 20th

Halo 2’s position at the top of the UK sales chart has caved in to the huge size of the PS2's installed base, with Microsoft's killer app dropping to number four i...

David Jenkins, Blogger

November 23, 2004

2 Min Read

Halo 2’s position at the top of the UK sales chart has caved in to the huge size of the PS2's installed base, with Microsoft's killer app dropping to number four in the charts. Following its capitulation, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas has regained its number one position, fighting off competition from Electronic Arts’ multiformat Need for Speed: Underground 2 and Vivendi’s PC FPS Half-Life 2. The latter has become the third fastest selling PC game ever in the UK, behind Championship Manager 4 and The Sims 2. However, with online-only purchases via Steam not being included in the data, its performance may have been even greater than this suggests. Other big-name PC titles have failed to penetrate the top twenty, with both Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault and Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines failing to register. At this busy time of year, though, it is wrong to brand any title a failure purely on its chart position, with final sales figures providing a truer account of a game’s fortunes.

TW

LW

Title

Publisher

Formats

Weeks

1

2

Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas

Rockstar

PS2

4

2

NE

Need for Speed: Underground 2

EA

All

1

3

NE

Half-Life 2

Vivendi

PC

1

4

1

Halo 2

Microsoft

Xbox

2

5

3

WWE SmackDown! vs. RAW

THQ

PS2

2

6

4

FIFA Football 2005

EA

All

7

7

6

The Getaway: Black Monday

SCEE

PS2

2

8

7

Pro Evolution Soccer 4

Konami

PS2

6

9

9

The Urbz: Sims in the City

EA

PS2/Xb/GC/GBA

1

10

5

Football Manager 2005

Sega

PC

3

Official UK Leisure Software Charts (c) ELSPA compiled by Chart-Track

Read more about:

2004

About the Author

David Jenkins

Blogger

David Jenkins ([email protected]) is a freelance writer and journalist working in the UK. As well as being a regular news contributor to Gamasutra.com, he also writes for newsstand magazines Cube, Games TM and Edge, in addition to working for companies including BBC Worldwide, Disney, Amazon and Telewest.

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